so knoxville, dallas and pittsburgh are in a very small club. looking deeply at the numbers, we see knoxville informed in infrastructure -- invested in infrastructure, often spending money from the government through its federal stimulus program. and dallas was not hit as hard as many cities in the housing industry plunge. and then there's this coming to light today, the mayor of detroit now admitting his city has reached a breaking point, bankruptcy on a the table, we're told, but the mayor hoping to avoid that by furloughing some of the 11,000 city workers, and that will begin in january. quickly, though, back to the good news. three of our 76 recognized major metro areas are feeling some relief. doesn't sound good when you put it that way, but that's the deal. long way to go yet, jenna. jenna: that's the context, but it is 3 of 76. all right, harris, thank you. jon: pittsburgh did a great job of diversifying when steel sort of went away, and it shows. jenna: here i thought it had something to do about the football team. jon: i'm a bronco fan,